[06:51] <brobostigon> morning boy and girls.
[07:10] <zmoylan-pi> o/
[07:13] <brobostigon> o/
[07:28] <marshmn> o/
[13:04] <ali1234> interest... the steal message alert thing appears to stop counting at 101 items :)
[13:04] <ali1234> *steam
[15:10] <marshmn> I'm giving some Google 'mesh' WiFi adapters a try... (replacing previous TP-Link powerline network) - seems OK so far, but early days...
[15:10] <marshmn> very nice and easy to configure
[15:12] <marshmn> and I already see some benefits - with my powerline WiFi adapters there seemed to be some issues with uPNP traffic not getting passed through very well (resulting in not being able to use Noson to control Sonos speakers)
[15:12] <marshmn> that seems to work fine with the new setup
[15:15] <daftykins> the earlier adapters possibly didn't handle things at a low enough level, although to my mind the idea of wireless packets hopping multiple times is horrible - much rather wired infrastructure and access points centralised to a switche - but granted you might be renting or some such and not have that option
[15:15] <daftykins> s/switche/switch/
[15:17]  * penguin42 is surprised they had problems with uPNP - I'd assumed they were layer2
[15:17] <daftykins> yeah i can't think what's up with that
[15:17] <daftykins> i think lower end ones can fail to handle broadcast traffic of types o0
[15:31] <marshmn> I'm renting - so yes, my options are limited
[15:32] <marshmn> I think that with the powerline adapters the uPNP traffic wasn't passed between the 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks
[15:32] <marshmn> at least that's my guess
[15:32] <marshmn> Sonos devices only operate on 2.4GHz (I believe) and my laptop was on 5GHz